“Well, the first man in the line was that old houn’ that’s layin’ over there with his toes turnin’ cold. He filed on something, and when I collared him about the money, he throwed me down. He said he sold the numbers of land that didn’t have no more copper on it than the palm of his hand, and he said he’d just filed on the land that had the mines. He showed me the papers; then he hopped his horse and come on down here.”
“Incredible!” exclaimed the Governor.
“It was like him,” Slavens corroborated. “He was a fox.”
“I was goin’ to take a shot at him,” bragged Ten-Gallon, “but he was too fur ahead of me. He had a faster horse than mine; and when I got here last night he was already located on that claim. The copper mine’s over there where the old feller’s tent stands, I tell you. They ain’t enough of it on this place to make a yard of wire.”
“And you carried the story of Shanklin’s deception and fraud to my son,” nodded the Governor, fixing a severe eye on Ten-Gallon, “and he sought the gambler for an explanation?”
“Well, he was goin’ to haul the old crook over the fire,” admitted Ten-Gallon, somewhat uneasy under the old man’s eye.
The Governor walked away from them again in his 322 abstracted, self-centered way, and stood looking off across the troubled landscape. Dr. Slavens stepped to the tent to see how the patient rested, and Ten-Gallon gave Agnes another wink.
“Comanche’s dwindlin’ down like a fire of shavin’s,” said he. “Nobody couldn’t git hurt there now, not even a crawlin’ baby.”
Indignation flushed her face at the man’s familiarity. But she reasoned that he was only doing the best he knew to be friendly.
“Are you still chief of police there?” she asked.